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Monday, August 22, 2016

another energized parody from the psyche of Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg and Jonah Hill - recounts the account of a wiener named Frank who, alongside a variety of other grocery store sustenances, endeavors to find reality behind his presence.

Try not to give the truth it's a liveliness a chance to trick you - this is one film that is not for kids. Loaded with medication use, F-bombs in abundance and a serious leftfield sexual moment, Sausage Party could in all likelihood be the year's most defiled silver screen discharge.

In Sweden, you can see this film as youthful as seven.

A long ways from the BBFC's choice to give it a 15-endorsement in the UK, the Swedish Media Council has rather permissively given Sausage Party a 11-rating which permits kids beyond 7 years old to see the film insofar as they're joined by a grown-up.

Luckily, this Swedish film's site seems to see the acknowledged age limit as strikingly youthful - the last line of its composed abstract cautions: "Wiener Party is NOT a family motion picture."

Take it from us - this is not a film you need to see with your folks at any age, not to mention such a youthful one. Try not to trust us? At that point cast your eyes at admonitory site Kids In Mind which gave a definite rundown of Sausage Party's realistic scenes.

Such a scene incorporates a minute where "four things make a butt-centric vaginal-oral daisy chain, all pushing fiercely as a taco sucks brutally on a frank."

Rogen, Kristen Wiig, Edward Norton and Salma Hayek all give voicework to the film, the last playing a lesbian taco named Teresa.

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What a Business Stands for Can Mean as Much as What It Does

If you've ever seen the 1980s movie "Wall Street," you probably recall Gordon Gekko saying that "greed is good."

He may have been a bit shortsighted. Times are changing and so are people's attitudes about corporate America. In fact, a recent survey conducted by the insurance company Aflac suggests Gekko's days are numbered.

Survey Revelations

Here are some of the things the study found:

* 79 percent of consumers believe companies that stay true to their ethics and values outperform others in their field.

* When it comes to millennials, who are 80 million strong with a $200 billion annual purchasing power, 92 percent are more likely to patronize an ethical company.

* 81 percent of consumers are more likely to purchase from corporations that are active in philanthropic efforts year-round as opposed to only in times of need.

* 60 percent of investors would sacrifice profit for ethical standards when making long-term investment decisions.